Embedders may have special requirements around file opening, so we add a
new `check_open` permission check that is called as part of the file
open process.
Adds an `addr` field to `HttpServer` to simplify the pattern
`Deno.serve({ onListen({ port } => listenPort = port })`. This becomes:
`const server = Deno.serve({}); port = server.addr.port`.
Changes:
- Refactors `serve` overloads to split TLS out (in preparation for
landing a place for the TLS SNI information)
- Adds an `addr` field to `HttpServer` that matches the `addr` field of
the corresponding `Deno.Listener`s.
This PR enables V8 code cache for ES modules and for `require` scripts
through `op_eval_context`. Code cache artifacts are transparently stored
and fetched using sqlite db and are passed to V8. `--no-code-cache` can
be used to disable.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This allows people to use imports like:
```ts
import "./app.css";
```
...with `deno check` in systems where there's a bundle step (ex. Vite).
This will still error when using it with `deno run` or if the referenced
file does not exist.
See test cases for behaviour.
This PR adds a benchmark intended to measure how the LSP handles larger
repos, as well as its performance on a more realistic workload.
The repo being benchmarked is
[deco-cx/apps](https://github.com/deco-cx/apps) which has been vendored
along with its dependencies. It's included as a git submodule as its
fairly large. The LSP requests used in the benchmark are the actual
requests sent by VSCode as I opened, modified, and navigated around a
file (to simulate an actual user interaction).
The main motivation is to have a more realistic benchmark that measures
how we do with a large number of files and dependencies. The
improvements made from 1.42 to 1.42.3 mostly improved performance with
larger repos, so none of our existing benchmarks showed an improvement.
Here are the results for the changes made from 1.42 to 1.42.3 (the new
benchmark is the last one listed):
**1.42.0**
```test
Starting Deno benchmark
-> Start benchmarking lsp
- Simple Startup/Shutdown
(10 runs, mean: 379ms)
- Big Document/Several Edits
(5 runs, mean: 1142ms)
- Find/Replace
(10 runs, mean: 51ms)
- Code Lens
(10 runs, mean: 443ms)
- deco-cx/apps Multiple Edits + Navigation
(5 runs, mean: 25121ms)
<- End benchmarking lsp
```
**1.42.3**
```text
Starting Deno benchmark
-> Start benchmarking lsp
- Simple Startup/Shutdown
(10 runs, mean: 383ms)
- Big Document/Several Edits
(5 runs, mean: 1135ms)
- Find/Replace
(10 runs, mean: 55ms)
- Code Lens
(10 runs, mean: 440ms)
- deco-cx/apps Multiple Edits + Navigation
(5 runs, mean: 11675ms)
<- End benchmarking lsp
```
`TestEventSender` should not be Clone so we don't end up with multiple
copies of the same writer FD. This is probably not the cause of the test
channel lockups, but it's a lot easier to reason about.
Due to a terminating NUL that was placed in a `r#` string, we were not
actually NUL-terminating pipe names on Windows. While this has no
security implications due to the random nature of the prefix, it would
occasionally cause random failures when the trailing garbage would make
the pipe name invalid.
This commit moves logic of dispatching lifecycle events (
"load", "beforeunload", "unload") to be triggered from Rust.
Before that we were executing scripts from Rust, but now we
are storing references to functions from "99_main.js" and calling
them directly.
Prerequisite for https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23342
I'm running into a node resolution bug in the lsp only and while
tracking it down I noticed this one.
Fixed by moving the project version out of `Documents`.
…faces (#23296)"
This reverts commit e190acbfa8.
Reverting because it broke stable API type declarations. We will reland
it for v1.43 with updated interfaces
Fixes the regression described in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/23293#issuecomment-2049819724.
This affected jupyter notebooks, as the LSP was passing in already
denormalized specifiers, while the jupyter kernel was not. We need to
denormalize the specifiers to evict the proper keys from our caches.
Currently we evict a lot of the caches on the JS side of things on every
request, namely script versions, script file names, and compiler
settings (as of #23283, it's not quite every request but it's still
unnecessarily often).
This PR reports changes to the JS side, so that it can evict exactly the
caches that it needs too. We might want to do some batching in the
future so as not to do 1 request per change.
This is PR a smaller retry of #23066 that simply ensures all async
`ext/fs` ops are accounted for if left hanging in tests. This also sorts
the `OP_DETAILS` in alphabetical order for easy future reading.
When reviewing, it might be best to look at the commits in order for
better understanding.
Removes the certificate options from all the interfaces and replaces
them with a new `TlsCertifiedKeyOptions`. This allows us to centralize
the documentation for TLS key management for both client and server, and
will allow us to add key object support in the future.
Also adds an option `keyFormat` field to the cert/key that must be
omitted or set to `pem`. This will allow us to load other format keys in
the future `der`, `pfx`, etc.
In a future PR, we will add a way to load a certified key object, and we
will add another option to `TlsCertifiedKeyOptions` like so:
```ts
export interface TlsCertifiedKeyOptions =
| TlsCertifiedKeyPem
| TlsCertifiedKeyFromFile
| TlsCertifiedKeyConnectTls
| { key: Deno.CertifiedKey }
```
Previously we locked the entire `FileSystemDocuments` even for lookups,
causing contention. This was particularly bad because some of the hot
ops (namely `op_resolve`) can end up hitting that lock under contention.
This PR replaces the mutex with synchronization internal to
`FileSystemDocuments` (an `AtomicBool` for the dirty flag, and then a
`DashMap` for the actual documents).
I need to think a bit more about whether or not this introduces any
problematic race conditions.
Changes `discreet` in the documentation for `discrete`
"Discreet" means careful to avoid being noticed, "discrete" means
separate parts, and is what the documentation refers to.
The TS language service requests source files via
[getSourceFile](7a25fd5ef0/cli/tsc/99_main_compiler.js (L560)).
In that function, we [unconditionally
add](7a25fd5ef0/cli/tsc/99_main_compiler.js (L613-L614))
the source file to our sourceFileCache. The issue is that we only remove
things from that cache if the source file [becomes out of
date](7a25fd5ef0/cli/tsc/99_main_compiler.js (L777-L783)).
For files that don't get changed, we keep them in the cache
indefinitely. So sometimes we keep SourceFile objects from being GC'ed
because they're retained in our cache, even though TS doesn't refer to
them any more. I see this in pretty much all of the heap snapshots I've
taken.
---
The fix here is pretty direct - just store weak references to the
sourcefiles in the cache. It doesn't really change our caching behavior,
it just prevents us from being the only retainer of a `SourceFile`. I
also split the `sourceFileCache` into a separate cache just for assets,
as we rely on those being alive.
The simpler fix is to only cache assets, but presumably that has a perf
impact.
---
In local testing, this PR reduced the size of the JS heap by about 1 GB
when using `deno lsp` in the Typescript repo.
This functionality was broken. The series of events was:
1. Load the npm resolution from the lockfile.
2. Discover only a subset of the specifiers in the documents.
3. Clear the npm snapshot.
4. Redo npm resolution with the new specifiers (~500ms).
What this now does:
1. Load the npm resolution from the lockfile.
2. Discover only a subset of the specifiers in the documents and take
into account the specifiers from the lockfile.
3. Do not redo resolution (~1ms).
The tests would deadlock if we tried to write the sync marker into a
pipe that was full because one test streamed just enough data to fill
the pipe, so when we went to actually write the sync marker we blocked
when nobody was reading.
We use a two-phase lock for sync markers now: one to indicate "ready to
sync" and the second to indicate that the sync bytes have been received.
This commit adds enum to "InstallFlags" and "UninstallFlags" that will
allow to support both local and global (un)installation.
Currently the local variant is not used.
Towards https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23062
Fixes #23163.
The client-facing warning doesn't provide any value and is super
annoying. We still emit a warning message on the server side for format
errors, which should fulfill the same (less intrusive) purpose.
When `DENO_FUTURE=1` env var is present, then BYONM
("bring your own node_modules") is enabled by default.
That means that is there's a `package.json` present, users
are expected to explicitly install dependencies from that file.
Towards https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23151
Was doing a bit of debugging on why some stuff is not working in a
personal project and ran a quick debug profile and saw it cloning the
pkg json a lot. We should put this in an Rc.
Unused locals and parameters don't make sense to surface in remote
modules. Additionally, fast check can cause these kind of diagnostics
when publishing, so they should be ignored.
Closes #22959
Was investigating a separate stack overflow (that I've now found in the
node resolution code) and came across this. We should avoid recursion
(this is very old code).
This PR introduces the ability to exclude certain paths from the file watcher
in Deno. This is particularly useful when running scripts in watch mode,
as it allows developers to prevent unnecessary restarts when changes are
made to files that do not affect the running script, or when executing
scripts that generate new files which results in an infinite restart
loop.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
In preparation for upcoming changes to `deno install` in Deno 2.
If `-g` or `--global` flag is not provided a warning will be emitted:
```
⚠️ `deno install` behavior will change in Deno 2. To preserve the current behavior use `-g` or `--global` flag.
```
The same will happen for `deno uninstall` - unless `-g`/`--global` flag
is provided
a warning will be emitted.
Towards https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23062
---------
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit changes "deno init" subcommand to use "jsr:" specifier for
standard library "assert" module. It is unversioned, but we will change
it to `@^1` once `@std/assert` release version 1.0.
This allows us to start decoupling `deno` and `deno_std` release. The
release scripts have been updated to take that into account.